Mark Twain makes the man

SHARON — Anyone who’s been to a selectmen’s meeting here knows that First Selectman Brent Colley is a history buff. Every meeting ends with him sharing a little tidbit of Sharon history. 

But most people didn’t know  (until now) that Colley’s particular history passion is Connecticut’s own Samuel Clemens aka Mark Twain.

On Friday night, Oct. 23, Colley “borrowed” the Bok Gallery at the Sharon Playhouse and gave a talk titled “Mark Twain as I Know Him.” The unofficial subtitle of the talk: How Mark Twain Changed My Life.

Colley grew up in Redding, Conn., and spent many hours of his childhood at the Mark Twain Library — but he didn’t spend many of those hours reading books. The library, he explained, had activities for kids so he was there a lot but he never really developed a love of reading, or for history.

It wasn’t until he was 27 years old that his interest was piqued, in books and in history and in learning in general. He felt then that he’d wasted too many years and he didn’t want other young people to do the same. The Internet was starting to be kind of a big deal right around then, so he decided to start a history website, www.historyofredding.com.

“And then in 2002, Ken Burns made a documentary about Mark Twain,” he explained to his large audience on Friday night. “And it mentioned Redding,” which is not a town normally associated  with the author.

Important anniversaries

Suddenly, he said, “my phone and my email inbox and the website started lighting up with people asking questions about him.”

There were two significant Clemens anniversaries coming up at that time, as well, and both were related to Redding. The author had retired to his estate there, called Stonefield, in 1908 and had died there in 1910. 

In his will, he left a bequest of $6,000 to the town and asked that the money be used to build a library. He wanted it named in honor of his daughter, Jean, who had died not long before, of spinal meningitis.

Within a year, the town had built the library — but they named it the Mark Twain Library. 

In the years after the Burns film was released, Colley began to work with the library’s director, Heather Morgan, and a portrait painter named Susan Durkee. Together, they began to piece together bits of Clemens’ history as it related to Redding — and then, because they found the work so rewarding, they created a website showing all the places in the state that have a link of some kind to the author.

There is a similar site in Illinois for towns with a connection to Abraham Lincoln, Colley said. It features eight locations. 

“In Connecticut, there are 56 Twain sites,” he said. Sharon is one of those sites: Twain had a friend here named Frank J. Sprague, who was instrumental in the creation of motorcars, elevators and electric railways.

One of the aspects of Twain’s life that Colley focused on in his talk was the author’s travels. At a time when there were no cars or airplanes, he said, Clemens began to wander widely around North America (including a visit to Hawaii, known then as the Sandwich Islands). 

All that wandering helped create the man that Clemens grew to be — and it also provided him with a very deep well of interesting characters and stories that he could draw from for his stories and novels.

Simple truths

Colley didn’t talk much about Twain’s books; people already know about them, he said. 

He focused more on the author’s life (which he said, on a personal level, made the books vastly more interesting to him); and on Twain’s later career as a public speaker. It was his talks that eventually brought him out of a late-life bankruptcy; and it was the talks that made him famous, and brought readers to the books.

Clemens’ career as a speaker also had a particular impact on Colley’s life.

“Mark Twain is the reason I can sit on this stage and tell you about him without my leg shaking and my voice cracking because I find this so interesting, I want to share it with other people.”

Dressed simply in slacks and a sweater, Colley perched on a stool on the stage and let archival images of Twain, his home, his books and his loved ones help him tell the story. 

It was clear Colley wouldn’t need much encouragement to share what he’s learned, again and again. But one particular reason he gave that talk on that night at that place, he said, was to remind Sharon residents that the playhouse and the Bok Gallery are largely unused in winter.

The theater had been loaned to him for the evening and he encouraged his friends and neighbors to think of other ways to use the space.

“You can tell your stories, you can show your favorite movie,” he said. 

“I want us to do stuff together, as a town,” he said. “I want us to laugh and have fun, as a town.”

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